Towards the Semantic Web - Ontology-DrivenKnowledge Management
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  • Wiley

More About This Title Towards the Semantic Web - Ontology-DrivenKnowledge Management

English

With the current changes driven by the expansion of the World Wide Web, this book uses a different approach from other books on the market: it applies ontologies to electronically available information to improve the quality of knowledge management in large and distributed organizations. Ontologies are formal theories supporting knowledge sharing and reuse. They can be used to explicitly represent semantics of semi-structured information. These enable sophisticated automatic support for acquiring, maintaining and accessing information. Methodology and tools are developed for intelligent access to large volumes of semi-structured and textual information sources in intra- and extra-, and internet-based environments to employ the full power of ontologies in supporting knowledge management from the information client perspective and the information provider.
The aim of the book is to support efficient and effective knowledge management and focuses on weakly-structured online information sources. It is aimed primarily at researchers in the area of knowledge management and information retrieval and will also be a useful reference for students in computer science at the postgraduate level and for business managers who are aiming to increase the corporations' information infrastructure.

The Semantic Web is a very important initiative affecting the future of the WWW that is currently generating huge interest. The book covers several highly significant contributions to the semantic web research effort, including a new language for defining ontologies, several novel software tools and a coherent methodology for the application of the tools for business advantage. It also provides 3 case studies which give examples of the real benefits to be derived from the adoption of semantic-web based ontologies in "real world" situations. As such, the book is an excellent mixture of theory, tools and applications in an important area of WWW research.
* Provides guidelines for introducing knowledge management concepts and tools into enterprises, to help knowledge providers present their knowledge efficiently and effectively.
* Introduces an intelligent search tool that supports users in accessing information and a tool environment for maintenance, conversion and acquisition of information sources.
* Discusses three large case studies which will help to develop the technology according to the actual needs of large and or virtual organisations and will provide a testbed for evaluating tools and methods.
The book is aimed at people with at least a good understanding of existing WWW technology and some level of technical understanding of the underpinning technologies (XML/RDF). It will be of interest to graduate students, academic and industrial researchers in the field, and the many industrial personnel who are tracking WWW technology developments in order to understand the business implications. It could also be used to support undergraduate courses in the area but is not itself an introductory text.

English

John Davies leads the Semantic Technology research group at BT. Current interests centre around the application of semantic web technology to business intelligence, information integration, knowledge management and service-oriented environments. He is Project Director of the 12m ACTIVE EU integrated project. He co-founded the European Semantic Web conference series. He is also chairman of the European Semantic Technology Conference and a Vice-President of the Semantic Technology Institute. He chairs the NESSI Semantic Technology working group. He has written and edited many papers and books in the areas of the semantic technology, web-based information management and knowledge management; and has served on the program committee of numerous conferences in these and related areas. He is a Fellow of the British Computer Society and a Chartered Engineer. Earlier research at BT let to the development of a set of knowledge management tools which are the subject of a number of patents. These tools were spun out of BT and are now marketed by infonic Ltd, of which Dr. Davies is Group Technical Advisor. Dr, Davies received the BT Award for Technology Entrepreneurship for his contribution to the creation of infonic.

Dieter Fensel is a German researcher in languages and the semantic web. He is a professor at the University of Innsbruck and the director of the Semantic Technologies Institute Innsbruck, which is a research group at the university.

Frank van Harmelen is the editor of Towards the Semantic Web: Ontology-driven Knowledge Management, published by Wiley.

English

Foreword.

Biographies.

List of Contributors.

Acknowledgments.

Introduction (J. Davies, et al.).

OIL and DAML+OIL: Ontology Languages for the Semantic Web (D. Fensel, et al.).

A Methodology for Ontology-based Knowledge Management (Y. Sure and R. Studer).

Ontology Management: Storing, Aligning and Maintaining Ontologies (M. Klein, et al.). 

Sesame: A Generic Architecture for Storing and Querying RDF and RDF Schema (J. Broekstra, et al.).

Generating Ontologies for the Semantic Web: OntoBuilder (R. Engels and T. Lech).

OntoEdit: Collaborative Engineering of Ontologies (Y. Sure, et al.). 

QuizRDF: Search Technology for the Semantic Web (J. Davies, et al.).

Spectacle (C. Fluit, et al.).

OntoShare: Evolving Ontologies in a Knowledge Sharing System (J. Davies, et al.).

Ontology Middleware and Reasoning (A. Kiryakov, et al.).

Ontology-based Knowledge Management at Work: The Swiss Life Case Studies (U. Reimer, et al.).

Field Experimenting with Semantic Web Tools in a Virtual Organization (V. Iosif, et al.).

A Future Perspective: Exploiting Peer-to-Peer and the Semantic Web for Knowledge Management (D. Fensel, et al.).

Conclusions: Ontology-driven Knowledge Management - Towards the Semantic Web? (J. Davies, et al.).

References.

Index.

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